Blended digital and print resources specifically created for the new AQA A/AS Level English Literature B specification, available from early 2015. Main intro back cover copy text here Rumquo esequos doloreictus et mo volores am, conse la suntum et voloribus. Brighter thinking for the new curriculum: voloreriate prae es vendipitiaauthor diatia • Cerrore Written by anpaexperienced team of teachers, partners necusam ditia aut perrovitam aut eum et im ius and advisers. dolut exceris et pro maximintum num quatur aut landese quatem.content Sedit et am, eum quiassusand ius motivate learners. • et Rich digital to engage con none eris ne nobis expliquis dolori ne cus,
• Differentiated resources to support all abilities.
• Progression and development at the heart of all our resources.
Brighter Thinking
ENGLISH LITERATURE B A/AS Level for AQA Sample
For more information or to speak to your local sales representative, please contact us:
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Written from draft specification
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Foreword From September 2015, there will be some major operational changes to post‑16 qualifications. AS and A Levels will be decoupled, and a full A Level will be assessed over a two-year linear course. The content of specifications will reflect more current thinking in higher education, providing a supportive yet challenging platform for Key Stage 4 to 5 transitions, enabling students to move beyond their studies either to undergraduate courses, employment or alternative training. Within this context, Cambridge University Press is developing brand-new resources to support teachers and their students at every stage of the AS and A Level journey. From planning programmes of study and schemes of work, to delivering exciting lessons, and assessing and supporting students’ progress to encourage criticality, wider reading and independence of thought. The A/AS Level Student Books from Cambridge University Press are designed to support students, providing differentiation through scaffolding for those who need more support, and real degrees of challenge for the more able. Each book is designed around an innovative three-part structure. • A ‘Beginning’ section that sets out the basic parameters for the subject, eases the transition from GCSE, and provides a substantial reference point for students as they work through the course. • A ‘Developing’ section that offers the most up-to-date content around key topic areas, activities that support analytical and writing skills and references to research and further reading where necessary. • An ‘Enriching’ section that provides learning beyond the specification, including extensive wider reading lists, up-to-date and relevant research from higher education and professional practice, independent research projects and specially commissioned written pieces and video interviews with leading academics, writers, actors and poets. All of the resources from Cambridge University Press have been written by established and trusted names in English education, drawn from secondary, further and higher sectors. They have many years of experience in teaching, writing, researching and assessment, and are committed to providing the best possible resources for teachers and their students to use. Marcello Giovanelli, Series Editor
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Authors Series Editor and Author: Marcello Giovanelli Marcello is a Lecturer in English in Education at the University of Nottingham. He previously worked in secondary schools as a Head of English, an Assistant Headteacher, a Deputy Headteacher, and a Lecturer in English Language and Linguistics in higher education (at the University of Nottingham, and Middlesex University). He is a consultant teacher for NATE and sits on their post-16/higher education committee. Marcello is the co-author of two A Level English Language textbooks, and has written a number of articles for professional journals as well as having significant research publications in stylistics and applied linguistics.
Gary Snapper Gary is a former Head of English who now teaches A Level and IB English Literature at Cheney School in Oxford, he also leads workshops for teachers and trainee teachers around the UK on sixth form teaching. He is the editor of the National Association of the Teaching of English (NATE) professional journal Teaching English, and co-authored a teaching English Literature book with Carol Atherton and Andrew Green. Following his doctoral research, he continues to work as a Research Associate at Brunel University. He has written extensively for a number of audiences in journal articles and book chapters on post-16 English, and is on the post-16 committees of NATE and the English Association.
Carol Atherton Carol teaches English at Bourne Grammar School in Lincolnshire. She has written widely on A Level English Literature and the transition from post-16 to degree level study, and co-authored a teaching English Literature book with Gary Snapper and Andrew Green. Dr Atherton is a Fellow of the English Association, and a member of NATE’s post-16/higher education committee. She has worked with a number of organisations (including the English and Media Centre, QCA, the British Council, the English Subject Centre and the English Language Schools’ Association) on the teaching of English, curriculum change and continuing professional development. She has written for a range of publications aimed at students, teachers and academics.
Andrew Green Andrew has taught English within a range of 11-18 schools. He now teaches professional English at postgraduate level. He has published on a wide range of articles, books and resources for A Level texts from Shakespeare via the gothic tradition and Philip Larkin to Will Self, and co-authored a teaching English Literature book with Gary Snapper and Carol Atherton. He is also the author of a variety of English textbooks and research papers on many aspects of English pedagogy, but with a particular focus on the teaching of literature at A Level and in Higher Education.
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Our offering for AQA Cambridge University Press is delighted to have entered an approval process with AQA to publish resources for their new 2015 A Level English Literature B specification. We are driven by a simple goal: to create resources that teachers and students need to ignite a curiosity and love for learning. As England enters a new educational chapter, we are publishing a comprehensive suite of blended print and digital English resources specifically written for the new AQA English specifications, available from early 2015. Written by an experienced author team of teachers, partners and advisers, our A/AS Level English Literature resources for specification B will help bridge the gap from GCSE to A Level and prepare students for possible study beyond A Level. Supporting students at every stage of the new linear course, our differentiated resources are suitable for all abilities. Their unique three-part structure includes content to support students in addressing unseen poetry in an examination context and developing skills in comparing texts within literary genres. With rich digital content to engage and motivate learners, our simple and affordable resources build on subject knowledge and understanding, prepare students for achievement in the new A Level specification. Component entering the AQA endorsement process. Student Book A print Student Book bundled with our Elevate‑enhanced Edition, this skills-based student resource covers the full two-year course embedding AS Level. Other series components not entering the AQA endorsement process. Elevate-enhanced Edition An enhanced digital learning resource for students and teachers with customisable content, including engaging videos and opportunities to track and report on students’ progression. Teacher’s Resource Everything necessary for teachers to plan and deliver the specification.
Our inclusive print Student Book and Elevate-enhanced Edition bundle offers a sophisticated and cost‑effective solution, including everything necessary for the effective teaching and learning of the new A Level specification in one package.
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Our AQA resources Student Book
Elevate-enhanced Edition
Entering the AQA endorsement process.
Not entering the AQA endorsement process.
Bundled with our Elevate-enhanced Edition, this Student Book has been created specifically for the AQA A/AS Level 2015 English Literature B specification. Incorporating differentiated support, our Student Book is suitable for all abilities, providing stretch opportunities for the more able and additional support for those who need it.
Developed specifically for the new AQA A/AS Level 2015 English Literature B specification and available as a standalone product or as part our print Student Book and digital bundle, our Elevate‑enhanced Edition provides you with a flexible solution to deliver the new 2015 qualifications. This enhanced digital resource provides students with a range of tools, allowing them to take ownership of their learning.
The easy-to-navigate book clearly explains the differences between AS and A Level content and encourages deeper learning through a balance of teaching content and activities. Our A/AS Level English Language Student Book includes: • a unique three-part structure: a ‘Beginning’ section helps bridge the gap between GCSE and A Level, providing a firm foundation of knowledge a ‘Developing’ section engages students, develops knowledge and understanding of the core specification content, and is packed with activities an ‘Enriching’ section develops knowledge and interests further, and includes interviews with leading experts and professionals in the field • full coverage of a range of set texts and additional texts giving students exposure to a wider range of reading
Our Elevate-enhanced Editions: • include rich digital content including topic summary videos providing engaging bite-sized refreshers and overviews • allow students and teachers to annotate text and add audio notes and hyperlinks to content • enable teachers to create specific student groups to share notes and resources with – ideal for differentiation • allows for tracking and reporting in tests • includes a My Work folder that can be used to submit work to teachers • is available online through browsers, or offline through iOS or Android apps, so students can access the book content anytime, anywhere.
• a thematic and skills-based approach, to develop the required skills and engage students with themes across a range of contexts and genres • support for the new Literature B specification by: addressing the demands of unseen poetry with confidence developing skills in comparing texts within literary genres, taking into account the rationale and concepts behind categorising literature developing independent learning skills and extending wider reading • a range of activities to engage the learner • concise definitions of the key terms with contextualised examples.
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Teacher’s Resource Not entering the AQA endorsement process. Specifically developed for the AQA A/AS Level 2015 English Literature B specification, our FREE Teacher’s Resource will help with the planning and delivery of the course. Packed with practical guidance and support, our Teacher’s Resource includes: • a full Scheme of Work, mapping the Student Book content to the qualifications and highlighting opportunities to co-teach • links to additional online resources supplementing the content of the Student Book and providing teachers with a rich bank of content • clear and practical support for using activities from the Student Book and Elevate-enhanced Edition in the classroom, including differentiation opportunities • support for embedding and using Assessment for Learning within your teaching, written by Sue Brindley, a leading practitioner from the University of Cambridge’s Faculty of Education • includes practical delivery advice to help prepare for the new specification requirements.
You can access the Student Book sample chapters featured here online, and to view a sample demonstration of the Elevate-enhanced Edition, contact your local sales consultant through
www.cambridge.org/ukschools
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Using the Student Book
A/AS Level English Literature B A/AS Level English Literature B ACTIVITY 6
Of Cain awoke all that Readers of crime woeful breed, Etins and Think over your reading and viewing about crime. elves 1 How doand you feelevil-spirits about the characters you encounter – detectives, criminals, victims of crime? 2 How do your feelings vary from one text to another? Why? 3 Doessay you sometimes moreW.H. naturally todraws the In his ‘The Guiltyrelate Vicarage’, Auden perpetrator rather than the the characters victim of crime? What specific parallels between of classical are the ethical of this? tragedy and of theimplications detective story:
Greek tragedywriting and theand detective story have 7.1.5 Crime cultural value one characteristic in common, in which they Like westerns, horror writing, sciencethe boththrillers, differ from modern tragedy, namely, fiction, fantasy often characters areand notromance, changedcrime in or writing by theirisactions: dismissed as ‘lowbrow’ culture. The roots of the in Greek tragedy because their actions are fated, form ambiguous in because their credentials. Someevent, crime in theare detective story the decisive writers (e.g. Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens, Wilkie the murder, has already occurred.
Activities Activities engage learners to develop understanding and provide opportunities for students to test their skills.
Key Terms Concise definitions of key terms and, where possible, accompanied with contextualised examples.
Enriching
Collins, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) were serious writers producing serious literature, but there has ACTIVITY 9 always been a related strand of hack writing. Such Character andcontinues verisimilitude a dichotomy to exist, and crime writing Read again what W.H saysinferior about (because characters is often perceived as aAuden culturally in crime writing. popular?) form. Characters in literary texts do not always rely on realistic details or (verisimilitude). What Crime writing has immense power to capture and other concerns might drive an author’s representation hold the popular imagination. Thistoisbe an‘believable’ enthusiasmto of character? Do characters have not always maintained by crime writers themselves. function effectively? Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, heartily fed up with his Think about any investigator figures (e.g. Sherlock legendary creation Sherlock Holmes tried to kill Holmes, Inspector Morse or Jack Bauer) or criminal him off (he is pushed over the Reichenbach Falls figure you know from your own reading or viewing. by Professor Moriarty in ‘The Final Problem’ (1893)) In what ways are they ‘real’? In what ways are they only to give in to massive popular pressure by ‘unreal’? How does this relate to their function in the ‘resurrecting’ him in ‘The Adventure of the Empty text? House’ (1903). Serious writers have, however, continued to produce crime writing. Fleming’s James Bond novels and Key Ian terms John le Carré’s Smiley books are classics of criminal espionage. The reputationthis of both, however, has Verisimilitude: literally means likeness to tended suffer of their connection truthto and maybecause be summarised as ‘truth to with life’ what is perceived as a culturally ‘low value’ form. Likewise Graham Greene wrote many novels dealing with 7.2.2 Old English(e.g. andBrighton medieval crime and criminality Rock,quest A Gun For Sale, The Ministry of Fear and The Honorary Consul), narratives although interestingly he called this group of books Beowulf, the longest and greatest of Old English Beowulf ‘entertainments’ rather than novels, perhaps indicating poems, tells the tale of Beowulf, who leads the quest his own doubts as to the credibility of the form. to capture the beast Grendel and his mother. They
W.H Auden, writing of the American ‘hard-boiled’ detective writer Raymond Chandler, challenges the idea that writing about crime is necessarily a culturally inferior phenomenon:
•
Actually, whatever he may say, I think Mr. Chandler is interested in writing, not detective stories, but serious studies of a criminal milieu, the Great Wrong Place, and his powerful but extremely depressing for hooks shouldraids be read and have been responsible murderous on King judged, not asand escape but Hrothgar’s hall haveliterature, killed many of as hisworks finest men. of art. As Text 7D, a translated extract from Beowulf Beowulf, shows,
T e
Grendel, a criminal outsider, is overtly compared toACTIVITY Cain – the7first murderer, whose tale is told in the book of Genesis. Crime writing – ‘escape literature’ or ‘works of art’? Read again Auden’s views on Raymond Chandler. Text 7D extent do you think crime writing is about To what escapism and to whatgrim extent it art? Think about Grendel this monster wasiscalled, your own reading (and viewing) of crime writing. Can march-riever mighty, in moorland living, you and do you draw distinctions within the crime in fen and fastness; fief of the giants writing you’ve read/seen? Do you draw a distinction the hapless wight a while had kept between your reading of crime writing and other since the Creator his exile doomed. literary forms?
On kin of Cain was the killing avenged by sovereign God for slaughtered Abel. Ill fared his feud, and far was he driven, for the slaughter’s sake, fromof sight of men.writing 7.2 Development crime Of Cain awoke all that woeful breed, Although crime fiction as a literary genre did not Etins and elves and evil-spirits, develop until the nineteenth century, literature as well as the giants that warred with God dealing with crime is as old as literature itself. In weary while: but their wage was paid them!
this section, we explore the different ways writers of Fromand Beowulf, translated Frances B Gummere poetry, drama the novel haveby written about crime from the classical era to the present day.
7.2.1 Classical tragedy, comedy and Glossary verse narrative Fastness: wilderness Literature dealing with crime is as old as literature itself. The Greek and Roman theatre may seem distant Fief: slave from what we think of as crime writing, but provides Wight: being some interesting examples. Etin: monster Classical tragedy and comedy typically deal with the relationship between humans and higher powers (e.g. language the state Exploring or the gods). In both instances humans find themselves at the mercy of inevitable fate. This creates With its references ‘feud[ing]’, often creates conflicts to of ‘exile’, loyalty‘killing’, and forces us to ‘slaughter’, and punishment, the consider whereconflict the boundary lies between: connections to crime writing in ‘Beowulf’ are clear.
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Short ‘for interest’ features to give a new dimension to the content i.e. application to the workplace, bringing the subject to life and providing a link to the Enriching section at the end of the book.
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• •
L O
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O T re
T • • •
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It Th in o – to p b tr
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Cross reference Connection points as defined in the specification; to link concepts, skills and texts, and used to develop the recursive approach of the book. These provide links between content being studied, overviews of skills and approaches covered in Section 1, and related links between content in other units.
7 Developing: Elements of crime writing 7 Developing: Elements of crime writing the demands of society and the desires of the individual • what is right and what is wrong • the motivations of actions and their consequences. •
The connection of all of these to the idea of crime is evident. See Unit 5 for more on classical tragedy See Unit 6 for more on classical comedy Let’s think about the example of Sophocles’ play Oedipus Rex in more detail. Text 7E ACTIVITY 8 Oedipus rex and crime The tragedy of Oedipus (summarised in Text 7C) relates interestingly to the idea of crime writing.
Think: • What crimes does this play deal with? • What is the role of punishment in this narrative? • How does this narrative deal with issues of crime writing? Text 7C
It is over a decade since Oedipus became King of Thebes. Before becoming king, he has killed a man in a fight, but after successfully answering the riddle of the sphinx he becomes king and marries Jocasta – the recently widowed Queen. He is determined to save the city from the anger of the gods as the previous king has been murdered and no one has brought the criminal to justice. Oedipus vows to track down and punish the killer no matter who it is.
Tiresias, a seer, tells Oedipus to stop looking for the ACTIVITY 10 the king ignores him, Tiresias claims killer, but when that Oedipus himself is theknight murderer and that he Sir gawain and the green has killed his father and married his own mother. This reinforces a prophecy Oedipus has previously received while living in Corinth, but as Tiresias also claims the murderer was born in Thebes, the King refuses to believe the evidence points to him. Jocasta encourages his disbelief until a messenger • arrives carrying the tidings that Oedipus’ father • is• dead. The burden of evidence increases when a shepherd arrives and tells the tale of his discovery • of • an infant abandoned in the wilderness outside Thebes – that infant was Oedipus who was taken in • by • adoptive parents in Corinth.
Debate A focus on an issue for controversy/ debate/discursive essay writing (with reference to critical sources provided) to encourage deeper learning.
You could try looking at summaries for a range of other classical tragedies, comedies and verse narratives and think about the different ways in which they approach ideas relating to crime. Good texts to consider would be: the bloodthirsty plays of Seneca •7.2.3 a comedy such as Aristophanes’ Lysistrata • major verse narratives such as Homer’s Iliad or Virgil’s Aeneid. morality plays mystery plays •
•
Regular self-assessment opportunities throughout and at the end of each unit. • Self-assessment will support Assessment for Learning principles, helping students understand their areas of strength and areas for improvement. • Answers or short summaries of things to consider provided for each question.
Feedback on specific activities, providing students with support to reflect on their responses.
Oedipus now has to face up to the evidence – that the man he killed was none other than his father, King Laius, and that the woman he has married is his own mother, Laius’s wife Jocasta. Jocasta hangs herself, and Oedipus gouges his own eyes out with the pins from her dress and walks away from the city to wander blindly around Greece as a wretched example to others.
•
Check your learning
Ideas on…
Research Research point that has been carried out in the area of study.
Critical Lens
nt
.
Additional features not included in sample
And on the murderer this curse I lay! Sophocles, Oedipus Rex
Prompts the student to read through the lens of a particular critical theory, picking up on different ways of reading specific texts and linking to appropriate theories discussed in other units.
Critical thinking 29
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Questions related to research points/ study areas to provoke thinking.
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Using the Elevate-enhanced Edition Students can personalise their resources through text or audio annotations, adding links to useful resources, inserting bookmarks and highlighting key passages.
The user’s data synchronises when online, so their annotations and results are available on any device they use to access the Elevateenhanced Edition.
Additional functionality includes image galleries, zoomable images, animations, videos and interactive questions.
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Features available online only Supports deep links, so teachers can link from the Elevate-enhanced Edition to their VLE, and vice versa, helping integrate this exible resource into your teaching with minimal disruption.
A_AS_EnglishLitB.indd 9
Teachers can send their annotations to students, directing them to further sources of information, adding activities or additional content.
Media galleries and fully searchable content help users find the information they need.
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A/AS Level English Literature B
BEGINNING
2 An introduction to poetry
2.3bApproaching poetry You might be tempted to see poems as awkward puzzles with irritatingly difficult meanings that need to be solved like crosswords. But remember that poets enjoy shaping language in expressive ways to help convey meanings and ideas as effectively as possible. Don’t feel that you have to get ´the right answer’ and reduce a poem to little more than a paraphrased meaning. Instead look at ambiguity of meaning and language play as part of what makes poetry interesting and pleasurable. Another temptation to be avoided is treating poems as a kind of collection of random literary devices and techniques that have to be identified and listed, without any real sense of how all these things connectbup to convey the thoughts, feelings and ideas that the poet wants to express in a particular and effective way.
Exploring ways of looking at poetry A poem that has become very popular in recent years is ‘Introduction to Poetry’ by the contemporary American poet and English teacher Billy Collins. In it, he says he wants his students, among other things, to ‘waterski across the surface of the poem’. Instead, they seem to want to ´tie the poem to a chair with rope´ and ´torture´ it in order to ‘find out what it really means’. Read the poem on Elevate
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In this section of the chapter, we encourage you to take a broader view of poetry to help you to understand better: the way in which poems function as complete works of art that have a pleasurable impact on the reader – rather like a painting in an art gallery • the language ‘game’ that the writer plays with the reader in poetry, and the pleasure that this can produce. •
2.3.1bExperiencing poetry: the art of the reader More than any other form of literature, poetry is an expressive art – in some ways like painting, music or dance – designed to evoke an aesthetic response in the reader, a response by which the reader becomes aware of the beauty or power of the work and engages actively in interpreting it. ACTIVITY 5 Responding to art
a Look carefully at the paintings by Salvador Dali and Paul Klee shown in Gallery 2C and think about your responses to them. Do you like them? Do you find them interesting? What is it that you like or dislike or find interesting about them? b Now think about what the paintings are ‘about’. Can you identify any specific or general meanings in the paintings? What difference does being able to specify meaning(s) (or not!) make to your experience of the paintings? © Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
2 Beginning: An introduction to poetry
Gallery 2C
Salvador Dali
Paul Klee Š Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
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2 Beginning: An introduction to poetry painters and poets are often insistent that the ‘point’ of their work is not simply to express meaning, but also to convey atmosphere, mood and emotion, along with meanings and messages, in powerful ways. Many poets and painters are also clear that they want their work to provoke a variety of possible responses in the reader; and it’s possible that some of those responses are not ones that the artist intended. In the end, whether the poet or painter had a specific meaning in mind or not, they are not usually available (or willing) to tell us what this might have been. So we are left with the process of interpretation. Whether in ‘the real world’ or in the classroom, we weigh up our responses and come to decisions about what we think or feel. This does not mean, however, that, for the purposes of studying poetry, any meaning will do! In the literature classroom, you will learn how to evaluate interpretations using evidence from both inside and outside the text.
Exploring sound in poetry One vital aspect of poetry that does not feature in visual art is sound, which is a central part of its appeal. For this reason, it’s important always to ‘hear’ a poem in your head when you read it. Sound can feature in several ways in poetry: Rhythm can be created by the use of metre, and also by various kinds of repetition – of words, sounds or structures. • Rhyme often features in poetry, as well as other sound effects – such as alliteration and assonance, often having an onomatopoeic effect. • The pace and mood of a poem – the speed and feeling with which it might be read – can be affected by the use of rhythm and rhyme, the length of the lines and stanzas, the choice of long or short words and so on. •
2.3.2bCreating poetry: the art of the writer Your understanding and interpretation of poetry can be transformed by learning about what poets actually do when they write poetry. Poets use a wide range of literary techniques and devices to convey their meanings. Imagery is one of the most important because of its descriptive power; sound effects such as alliteration and assonance can also be very powerful. In addition, the poet’s choice of words, and the way those words are put together in sentences, can create different styles, tones, modes and atmospheres. All these techniques are shared by poets and other writers. In the rest of this chapter, we are going to focus on a set of techniques which is unique to poetry: the techniques of poetic form. For more on techniques writers use to shape meaning, revisit 2.2.5 Every poem and every poet has their own story, of course; but all poets work within and around a set of traditions and conventions which determine the shape and style of their poems. The decisions poets make when writing often involve using, rejecting or adapting these conventions in particular ways. The combination of conventions used to shape a poem on the page is known as its form. We can describe the form of any poem by identifying the decisions the poet has made about how to shape the poem. But to really get to grips with poetry, we also need to think about why poets decide to write using particular forms.
Key terms poetic form:ba set of techniques used by poets to give poems a particular shape and structure form (of a poem):bthe particular shape and structure of an individual poem
Whichever techniques the poet uses to enhance the sound of the poem, the way a poem sounds often reflects and strengthens its meanings.
See 2.4.5 for alliteration, assonance and onomatopoeia. © Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
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A/AS Level English Literature B
2.3.3 Rhyme
Exploring the sonnet
A poem may be rhymed or unrhymed – or sometimes a mixture of the two. There are no hard and fast rules about the effect of using rhyme or not doing so: as with most literary devices, effects must be judged in the context of the poem as a whole. However, rhymed verse often (not always) produces a lighter, more lively mood than unrhymed verse, and is almost always used in humorous or comic verse. The rhyme scheme of a poem is denoted by allocating a letter for each new set of rhymes. For instance the rhyme scheme of a sonnet might be denoted as follows: ABABCDCDEFEFEF. In this scheme, there are three rhyming units – ABAB/CDCD/EFEFEF. We can describe the rhyming units according to the number of lines they have: • • • • • • • •
two lines: couplet three lines: tercet or triplet four lines: quatrain five lines: quintet or cinquain six lines: sestet, sextet or sexain seven lines: septet eight lines: octave or octet above eight lines: no formal name is given.
Note that these rhyming units can occur within stanzas, as described above, or they can make up a whole stanza. In the style of sonnet mentioned above, there are two quatrains (four-line units, ABAB and CDCD) and one final sestet (a six-line unit, EFEFEF). Note, however, that although a sonnet is always 14 lines long, it can use a variety of different rhyme schemes.
Key terms rhyme:bwhere two or more words at the end of lines of verse share the same sound
Some poetic forms have developed over time as specific genres in themselves. For instance, the 14-line sonnet was immensely popular in the Renaissance, when it was used exclusively for love poetry. The sonnet tradition still continues, now used for a wider range of subjects. The long 14-line stanza of the sonnet enables the poet to formulate a kind of mini-argument or narrative within the stanza that often involves a shift in meaning or approach – often a surprising conclusion – in the last six lines (sextet) or in the last couplet. This shift is often referred to as the turn in the poem. ACTIVITY 7 Rhyme schemes Read one of Shakespeare’s most famous sonnets, Sonnet 18, in Text 2E. What is the rhyme scheme of this sonnet? Can you identify where the turn in the meaning of the poem occurs?
Text 2E
Sonnet 18 Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate. Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer’s lease hath all too short a date. Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold complexion dimmed; And every fair from fair sometime declines, By chance, or nature’s changing course, untrimmed; But thy eternal summer shall not fade, Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st, Nor shall death brag thou wand’rest in his shade, When in eternal lines to Time thou grow’st. So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
rhyme scheme:ba regular pattern of rhyming throughout a poem sonnet:ba 14-line poem which can use a variety of rhyme schemes to make up the 14 lines turn:ba point towards the end of a sonnet or other poem where there is a shift in the direction of the poem’s meaning
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William Shakespeare
Listen to a reading of Sonnet 18 on Elevate
Check your responses in the end-of-unit Ideas section.
© Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
2 Beginning: An introduction to poetry
2.3.4 Unrhymed and half-rhymed verse Where poems use rhymes like this throughout, the strong sound of the rhyming pattern can be an insistent, almost attention-seeking, feature of the verse. One reason why a poet might choose to write in unrhymed verse, therefore, is to create a more serious, reflective mood in which the reader’s attention is directed more fully towards the poem’s ideas, or other aspects of its language or form. Furthermore, in long narrative or dramatic verse, too much rhyme can become wearing to listen to, so many poets use unrhymed verse for that reason. Most of Shakespeare’s plays, for instance, were written in what we call blank verse – verse that has a regular metre but does not have any rhyme. Famously, Shakespeare often inserted rhyming couplets at the ends of scenes (or long speeches) of unrhymed blank verse to provide a memorable conclusion and to signal that the scene or speech had come to an end. As an alternative to unrhymed verse, a poet might choose to use some form of half rhyme. Until the 20th century, rhymes were almost always full rhymes of the traditional sort, but the advent of modernism brought with it experimentation with new forms of rhyme: half rhyme: a rhyme where only the final consonant of the rhyming words is the same, not the vowel (e.g. hat and cot, shape and keep) • vowel rhyme: a form of assonance where only the vowels in the rhyming words match each other (e.g. hat and lap, man and flat ) • consonant rhyme: a form of consonance where both consonants in the rhyming words match each other (e.g. hat and hot, limp and lump) • visual or eye rhyme: where the words look the same but don’t sound the same (e.g. come and home, give and dive). •
See 2.2.7 for assonance and consonance Using half rhyme provides both writer and reader with a rhyming structure while reducing its force. In some cases, the use of half rhyme might also reflect some aspect of the meaning of a poem, such as a sense of incompleteness or imperfection.
Key terms blank verse:bunrhymed verse – usually, verse that has metre but no rhyme half rhyme:bwhere only the final consonant of the rhyming words is the same vowel rhyme:bwhere only the vowel of the rhyming words is the same consonant rhyme:bwhere the consonants at the beginning and end are the same in both rhyming words, but not the vowel visual/eye rhyme:bwhere the rhyming words look the same but don’t sound the same
Exploring the effects of syllable rhyme The number of syllables that rhyme in a word can also be significant. The more syllables that rhyme, in general, the lighter the effect. Where three syllables in a word rhyme, this is almost always used for comic effect! We describe these different quantities of rhyme as: single rhyme = one rhyming syllable (e.g. coat, boat) • double rhyme = two rhyming syllables (e.g. bumper, jumper) • triple rhyme = three rhyming syllables (e.g. jollity, quality). •
2.3.5 Metre Until the 20th century, all Western poetry was written using metre, a rhythmic pattern similar to beats and bars in music. Like rhyme, one of the functions of metre was originally to help reciters of verse to memorise it and pass it on. Even now, many poets still use rhyme and metre because of the pleasure that pattern, rhythm and structure can bring to both writers and readers. Metre is described by identifying the number and pattern of stressed and unstressed beats in the lines of a poem. There are several different types of metre, but perhaps the most significant in English poetry has been the iambic pentameter, which is the metre used in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Shakespeare’s plays and many other poems.
© Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
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A/AS Level English Literature B A pentameter is a line of poetry with five feet or measures (a foot being similar to a bar of music). An iambic pentameter is a line in which each foot is an iamb – a unit in which the first syllable is unstressed and the second syllable is stressed. We can show this pattern of stresses as follows, using a well-known line from Romeo and Juliet:
He jests at scars that never felt a wound You can see that there are five stressed (in bold) and five unstressed syllables in this line, creating the rhythmic pattern that is the metre of the line. All metres can be described by naming the number of feet in the line (dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, and so on), and the type of feet that are used. The four main metrical feet are iambs, trochees, anapaests and dactyls.
You will find that many poems you encounter during your course are written using iambic pentameters and/or tetrameters and/or trimeters – for instance, poems by Geoffrey Chaucer (14th century); John Milton and John Donne (17th century); Jonathan Swift, Wiiliam Blake and Robert Burns (18th century); John Keats, Robert Browning, Christina Rossetti, Lord Tennyson, George Crabbe (19th century); Thomas Hardy, W.B.Yeats, Robert Frost, W.H. Auden, John Betjeman, Tony Harrison (20th century).
Exploring scansion The process of measuring out or ‘scanning’ the metre of a line of poetry is called scansion. The and are marked above the words symbols to mark out the stressed and unstressed syllables, while the symbol / is used to show the feet.
ACTIVITY 8 Writing iambic pentameters and tetrameters One of the reasons why iambic pentameters have been so popular over many centuries for writing poetry (especially longer poetry) is that they are close to the natural rhythms of speech and writing in English. So you will find that it is not difficult to make up your own iambic pentameters: they trip off the tongue quite easily.
Here are some examples:
I went to see my mother yesterday But when I got there she had gone away In London, there’s a river called the Thames With bridges you can cross along its length
Key terms metre:ba regular rhythm used to structure a whole line of verse iambic pentameter:ba metre consisting of five iambic feet pentameter:ba metre consisting of five feet foot:ba unit of rhythm in a metrical line iamb:ba metrical foot consisting of a short beat followed by a long beat (e.g. attempt) scansion:bthe system used to measure the metre of a line of verse dimeter:ba metre consisting of two feet trimeter:ba metre consisting of three feet
a Try writing some examples of your own. See whether you can have a conversation with a friend in iambic pentameters.
tetrameter:ba metre consisting of four feet
b Now write some iambic tetrameters – with only four iambic feet. Here is an example:
trochee:ba metrical foot consisting of a long beat followed by a short beat (e.g. legend)
My dog has eaten all my lunch There’s nothing left for me to eat
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hexameter:ba metre consisting of six feet
anapaest:ba metrical foot consisting of two short beats followed by one long beat (e.g. underfoot) dactyl:ba metrical foot consisting of one long beat followed by two short ones (e.g. murmuring) © Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
2 Beginning: An introduction to poetry
2.3.6 Varying metre Just as rhyme can dominate a poem if it is too heavy and unvaried, so metre can sometimes seem tediously rhythmic if it is not varied at times. So, poets have often tried to lessen the dominating effect of metre while at the same time retaining the essential rhythmic structure. Shakespeare, for instance, frequently and deliberately disrupted the flow of his chosen metre to create specific emphases in the verse, and to ensure that the verse did not become monotonous. For instance, in Hamlet:
To be or not to be: that is the question. In this example, the first three feet are iambic feet, but Shakespeare varies the stress pattern in the fourth and fifth feet so that the stress is on the first syllable of each foot. This enables him to place a strong emphasis on the word ‘that’, so that one reads the line ‘To be or not to be: that is the question.’ As well as creating emphasis on particular words or ideas, such variations in metre can sometimes reflect the meaning of a line or a whole poem, for instance by suggesting disruption or imperfection. The disrupted metres of Hamlet’s speeches, for example, help to convey the passion, rage and madness that characterise him in the play.
2.3.7 Stanzas As well as deciding on whether (and how) to use rhyme and metre, poets must make decisions about how to arrange the lines on the page. The traditional choices are either continuous verse (without stanzas) or stanzaic verse. Continuous verse is mainly used in longer narrative or dramatic texts; stanzas, on the
other hand, though used in poems of all lengths, are generally associated with shorter, lyric verse. Stanzas come in many forms and are used in various ways. These are some of the ways in which the form and use of stanzas may vary: Number of lines: Stanzas may be any number of lines long, from 2-line couplets to 14-line sonnets, and even longer. Stanzas between four and eight lines long are particularly common. • Rhyme and metre: Some stanza forms use a regular rhyme scheme and/or metre; others do not use rhyme or metre at all. • Shape of stanza: In some stanza forms, all the lines will be the same length and have the same metre in each stanza. In others, the stanza form may include lines of different lengths and metres. For example, in the four-line ballad form, the first and third lines are longer than the second and fourth and have a different metre, as in this example from Coleridge’s ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’: •
And now there came both mist and snow, And it grew wondrous cold: And ice, mast-high, came floating by, As green as emerald. •
Consistency of form: In most stanzaic poems, all the stanzas will have the same number of lines and the same metrical and rhyming pattern (if they have them). But in some poems, especially in modern free verse, the form may differ from stanza to stanza.
As with rhyme and metre, poets’ choices can have a major effect on the sound, the mood and sometimes even the meaning of the poem, although it’s not usually possible to say that using a particular form will inevitably have a particular effect. While it’s true that
To sleep, perchance to dream: aye, there’s the rub. Hamlet
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A/AS Level English Literature B some forms have specific associations – for instance, the limerick is invariably comic – in general, poetic forms work in combination with all the other elements of a poem, and so must be judged in context.
Key terms stanzaic verse:bpoetry written in stanzas ballad form:ba four-line rhyming stanza in which the first and third lines are a different length and metre from the second and fourth line limerick:ba five-line formulaic comic poem
Exploring the ballad Ballads are popular narrative poems which were originally spoken or sung, and were handed down orally. They usually tell tales of doomed love affairs. They have a regular structure, consisting of four-line stanzas, an ABCB rhyming pattern, and a regular metre. The longer first and third lines are iambic tetrameters; the second and fourth lines are iambic trimeters.
IDEAS ON ACTIVITIES Activity 5 Salvador Dali’s painting is called ‘Apparition of Face and Fruit-Dish on a Beach’. Paul Klee’s painting is called ‘Insula Dulcamara’ Activity 6 The poem is by Ted Hughes and is called ‘Crow’. Activity 7 This sonnet has the rhyme scheme ABABCDCDEFEFGG – three quatrains (ABAB/CDCD/ EFEF) and a final couplet (GG). The turn, as in most sonnets, takes place in the last six lines of the poem. The first part compares the person being addressed with the summer, listing various ways in which they are like the summer. The second part of the poem, however, says that, unlike the summer, this person’s beauty ‘shall not fade’ but will be ‘eternal’.
Many folk ballads still exist from the medieval age, but poets have continued to use the ballad form to tell stories since then. They were particularly popular with the Romantic poets, especially Wordsworth and Coleridge, who were attracted by their relatively simple form and language.
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© Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
A/AS Level English Literature B
DEVELOPING
7 Elements of crime writing
In this unit, you will: • find out about major concepts surrounding crime and society • explore how writers in a variety of genres have explored crime • develop your abilities to think critically about literary representations of crime
elements of crime writing we will explore. Writers and the texts they produce are the products of context, and the same is true of readers. As a student of literature, you are involved in a process of recreating meaning from literary texts, and exploring the ways in which writers and readers work in context will help you think about different ways in which texts are produced and received.
7.1bIntroduction to crime writing Writing about crime has a long and illustrious tradition in English – and indeed world – literature. While the best known manifestations of crime writing are perhaps the great crime sensation novels of the Victorian era, the cultural phenomenon that is Sherlock Holmes and the detective novels, films and television series of our own time, crime has been an enduring element of literary creation dating back to the very earliest known texts. Central concepts of writing about crime are: transgression, guilt, investigation, revenge, judgement and punishment. As you work through this unit, you’ll develop an understanding of how authors across time have returned to concepts related to crime and the impact of criminal behaviour upon individuals and society more broadly. This will provide you with a variety of lenses through which to read texts dealing with crime, although they will not all present in all texts. Writers work creatively within literary genres, so don’t be surprised to find that texts you study play with, directly challenge or even totally ignore some of the
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ACTIVITY 1 Thinking about concepts Think back over your reading to date. Jot down examples of where you’ve encountered transgression, guilt, investigation, revenge, judgement and punishment. Try to define what these concepts mean to you.
Several well-known stories from the Bible deal with issues of crime and its consequences: In Genesis, Adam and Eve commit a crime against God by eating the fruit of the forbidden tree and are expelled from the Garden of Eden in consequence • Cain murders his brother Abel and in punishment God places a mark upon him and he is driven out to live a life of wandering • Joseph is imprisoned after being falsely accused of committing adultery with Potiphar’s wife • In the book of Exodus, Moses murders an Egyptian slave-driver and as a result is not allowed to enter the Promised Land as his punishment by God. •
© Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
7 Developing: Elements of crime writing There are also many examples in literary texts: •
• •
•
•
In Sophocles’ play Oedipus Rex, the eponymous hero unknowingly murders his father and sleeps with his mother In Beowulf, the warrior Beowulf avenges the foul crimes of the beast Grendel and his mother The revenge tragedies of the Renaissance era are intensely and darkly fascinated with human sin, crime and vengeance In works like Christopher Marlowe’s Dr Faustus and John Milton’s Paradise Lost, Faustus and Satan respectively are punished for their flagrant challenges to God’s authority Gothic fiction could not exist without notions of crime and punishment. See 5.3.2 for revenge tragedy; see 5.3.4 for Gothic fiction.
Long before the rise of crime fiction in the mid-19th century, therefore, the seeds of the form were already flourishing. For that reason this chapter does not deal solely – or even largely – with conventional crime and detective fiction. Some examples draw on the core detective canon (such as Agatha Christie’s classic of the genre The Murder of Roger Ackroyd), but many other examples draw on the idea of crime writing more broadly. As you read, you will be introduced to the wider range of ideas and concerns that underlie the representation of crime in literature and how this relates to a range of contextual, moral and societal concerns.
Key terms Revenge tragedy:ba form of tragedy particularly concerned with crime and vengeance Gothic fiction:ba form of fiction that frequently deals with socially unacceptable and criminal behaviour Canon:ba core and established body of literary texts
ACTIVITY 2 What do you already know about crime writing? Think back over your study of literature to date and over your own personal reading and viewing. What stories, novels, plays, poetry, films, tv series and other kinds of writing have you come across that deal with crime? Do they all involve a detective or is your experience of crime writing wider than this?
7.1.2bWhat constitutes crime? The answer to the question ‘What is crime?’ may at first seem self-evident, but in fact the notion of crime is quite complex. Different social and religious systems have different ways of understanding what constitutes crime and of dealing with it. There are also significant differences between what is legally criminal and what might be considered socially criminal.
Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden Genesis 3:23, King James Bible
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A/AS Level English Literature B Exploring whether adultery is a crime In some parts of the world women caught committing adultery are punished by stoning • In the UK no legal penalty attaches to adultery • In France the notion of a ‘crime of passion’ still exists and is seen as mitigation for violence in certain adultery cases • While in the UK adultery is not a legal crime, many have experienced pain and the breakup of relationships and families caused by adultery – there are clear personal, familial and social costs attached; these costs may in some ways be considered criminal. •
Legal and social definitions of what constitutes crime often vary. Legally, crime can be defined as acts that contravene the law of the land – although even this is open to challenge, as events in courtrooms all over the world demonstrate every day. In social terms, crime is harder to tie down. Definitions may: be based on unwritten social and cultural codes • assume shared understanding and mutual respect • see crime as any action that breaks mutual trust within society • assume a body of ‘normal’ or ‘acceptable’ behaviours. •
‘natural’ and social law. In the following passage Tess considers society’s views of her actions:
But all the while, she was making a distinction where there was no difference. Feeling herself in antagonism, she was quite in accord. She had been made to break an accepted social law, but no law known to the environment in which she fancied herself such an anomaly. ACTIVITY 3 The idea of crime The word ‘crime’ is used in a wide range of different contexts, as shown in Fig 7A. You may want to add examples of your own. Now think: • • • • • •
What does each of these types of crime entail? Are they all equally serious? How do they help you to see crime in different ways? What kinds of activity do these crimes involve? How might the notion of crime be open to interpretation and perhaps abuse? What are the roles of society, the authorities and the individual in establishing what constitutes crime?
Fig 7A war crime sex crime
7.1.3.bWhat is social ‘law’?
Crime
The idea of social ‘law’ is important but often problematic. Is crime simply an anti-social act? (e.g. consider the idea of Anti-Social Behaviour Orders (or ASBOs). • Is crime a violation of ‘normal’ and acceptable’ behaviour? Who establishes what this means? • Is crime social or behavioural deviance? Does deviance have levels of severity? At what point does deviance become crime? • Is crime a threat to social order or morality? Where does that leave the right for challenges to the status quo, tradition and authority? •
In Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy explores just such ideas in relation to his heroine, Tess. She has had sex outside marriage, and Hardy uses her rejection by society to reflect philosophically on
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hate crime
crime of passion
thought crime crime against humanity
7.1.4bReligious perspectives on crime The major religions – and major world views such as Marxism or capitalism – have clear stances on crime and punishment. Naturally, these religious perspectives reflect varied societal and cultural formations. However, as globalisation leads to increasingly multicultural, multi-ethnic and multifaith societies, the idea that we can assume shared understanding of what constitutes criminal behaviour and how such behaviour should be punished is increasingly problematic.
© Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
7 Developing: Elements of crime writing Text 7B
See 9.1.1 for Marxism.
1 You shall have no other gods before me. When thinking about crime in English literature, a useful starting point is The Ten Commandments (Exodus 20), shown in Text 7B, which are the bases of the Jewish and Christian traditions. ACTIVITY 4 The Ten Commandments – defining crime Think about how these commandments relate to the idea of crime. Which relate to religious expectations? Which relate to social crime? Which relate to legal crime?
7.1.4bWhy do people read crime writing?
2 You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below.You shall not bow down to them or worship them. 3 You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God, for the Lord will not hold anyone guiltless who misuses his name. 4 Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you shall labour and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God. On it you shall not do any work … the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.
People read about crime – and often extremely brutal crime – as a way of exploring what they do not wish to experience or enact in their own lives. W.H Auden writes interestingly about this:
5 Honour your father and your mother, so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you.
I suspect that the typical reader of detective stories is, like myself, a person who suffers from a sense of sin. From the point of view of ethics, desires and acts are good or bad, and I must choose the good and reject the bad, but the I which makes this choice is ethically neutral; it only becomes good or bad in its choice. To have a sense of sin means to feel guilty at there being an ethical choice to make, a guilt which, however ‘good’ I may become, remains unchanged. As St. Paul says: ‘Except I had known the law, I had not known sin’.
7 You shall not commit adultery.
6 You shall not murder. 8 You shall not steal. 9 You shall not give false testimony against your neighbour. 10 You shall not covet your neighbour’s house. You shall not covet your neighbour’s wife, or his male or female servant, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbour.
It is interesting to think about our own motivations as readers and to think about how this positions us in relation to what we are reading.
Except I had known the law, I had not known sin.
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A/AS Level English Literature B ACTIVITY 5 Readers of crime Think over your reading and viewing about crime.
1 How do you feel about the characters you encounter – detectives, criminals, victims of crime? 2 How do your feelings vary from one text to another? Why? 3 Do you sometimes relate more naturally to the perpetrator rather than the victim of crime? What are the ethical implications of this?
7.1.6bCrime writing and cultural value Like thrillers, westerns, horror writing, science fiction, fantasy and romance, crime writing is often dismissed as ‘lowbrow’ culture. The roots of the form are ambiguous in their credentials. Some crime writers (e.g. Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) were serious writers producing serious literature, but there has always been a related strand of hack writing. Such a dichotomy continues to exist, and crime writing is often perceived as a culturally inferior (because popular?) form. Crime writing has immense power to capture and hold the popular imagination. This is an enthusiasm not always maintained by crime writers themselves. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, heartily fed up with his legendary creation Sherlock Holmes tried to kill him off (he is pushed over the Reichenbach Falls by Professor Moriarty in ‘The Final Problem’ (1893)) only to give in to massive popular pressure by ‘resurrecting’ him in ‘The Adventure of the Empty House’ (1903). Serious writers have, however, continued to produce crime writing. Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels and John le Carré’s Smiley books are classics of criminal espionage. The reputation of both, however, has tended to suffer because of their connection with what is perceived as a culturally ‘low value’ form. Likewise Graham Greene wrote many novels dealing with crime and criminality (e.g. Brighton Rock, A Gun For Sale, The Ministry of Fear and The Honorary Consul), although interestingly he called this group of books ‘entertainments’ rather than novels, perhaps indicating his own doubts as to the credibility of the form. W.H Auden, writing of the American ‘hard-boiled’
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detective writer Raymond Chandler, challenges the idea that writing about crime is necessarily a culturally inferior phenomenon:
Actually, whatever he may say, I think Mr. Chandler is interested in writing, not detective stories, but serious studies of a criminal milieu, the Great Wrong Place, and his powerful but extremely depressing hooks should be read and judged, not as escape literature, but as works ofbart. ACTIVITY 6 Crime writing – ‘escape literature’ or ‘works of art’? Read again Auden’s views on Raymond Chandler. To what extent do you think crime writing is about escapism and to what extent is it art? Think about your own reading (and viewing) of crime writing. Can you and do you draw distinctions within the crime writing you’ve read/seen? Do you draw a distinction between your reading of crime writing and other literary forms?
7.2bDevelopment of crime writing Although crime fiction as a literary genre did not develop until the nineteenth century, literature dealing with crime is as old as literature itself. In this section, we explore the different ways writers of poetry, drama and the novel have written about crime from the classical era to the present day.
7.2.1bClassical tragedy, comedy and versebnarrative Literature dealing with crime is as old as literature itself. The Greek and Roman theatre may seem distant from what we think of as crime writing, but provides some interesting examples. Classical tragedy and comedy typically deal with the relationship between humans and higher powers (e.g. the state or the gods). In both instances humans find themselves at the mercy of inevitable fate. This creates often creates conflicts of loyalty and forces us to consider where the boundary lies between: the demands of society and the desires of the individual • what is right and what is wrong • the motivations of actions and their consequences. •
© Cambridge University Press 2014 Written from draft specification
7 Developing: Elements of crime writing The connection of all of these to the idea of crime is evident. See Unit 5 for more on classical tragedy See Unit 6 for more on classical comedy Let’s think about the example of Sophocles’ play Oedipus Rex in more detail. ACTIVITY 7 Oedipus Rex and crime The tragedy of Oedipus (summarised in Text 7C) relates interestingly to the idea of crime writing.
Think: • What crimes does this play deal with? • What is the role of punishment in this narrative? • How does this narrative deal with issues of crime writing?
Check your responses in the end-of-unit Ideas section.
You could try looking at summaries for a range of other classical tragedies, comedies and verse narratives and think about the different ways in which they approach ideas relating to crime. Good texts to consider would be: the bloodthirsty plays of Seneca a comedy such as Aristophanes’ Lysistrata • major verse narratives such as Homer’s Iliad or Virgil’s Aeneid. • •
Text 7C
It is over a decade since Oedipus became King of Thebes. Before becoming king, he has killed a man in a fight, but after successfully answering the riddle of the sphinx he becomes king and marries Jocasta – the recently widowed Queen. He is determined to save the city from the anger of the gods as the previous king has been murdered and no one has brought the criminal to justice. Oedipus vows to track down and punish the killer no matter who it is. Tiresias, a seer, tells Oedipus to stop looking for the killer, but when the king ignores him, Tiresias claims that Oedipus himself is the murderer and that he has killed his father and married his own mother. This reinforces a prophecy Oedipus has previously received while living in Corinth, but as Tiresias also claims the murderer was born in Thebes, the King refuses to believe the evidence points to him. Jocasta encourages his disbelief until a messenger arrives carrying the tidings that Oedipus’ father is dead. The burden of evidence increases when a shepherd arrives and tells the tale of his discovery of an infant abandoned in the wilderness outside Thebes – that infant was Oedipus who was taken in by adoptive parents in Corinth. Oedipus now has to face up to the evidence – that the man he killed was none other than his father, King Laius, and that the woman he has married is his own mother, Laius’s wife Jocasta. Jocasta hangs herself, and Oedipus gouges his own eyes out with the pins from her dress and walks away from the city to wander blindly around Greece as a wretched example to others.
And on the murderer this curse I lay! Sophocles, Oedipus Rex
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A/AS Level English Literature B In his essay ‘The Guilty Vicarage’, W.H. Auden draws specific parallels between the characters of classical tragedy and of the detective story:
Greek tragedy and the detective story have one characteristic in common, in which they both differ from modern tragedy, namely, the characters are not changed in or by their actions: in Greek tragedy because their actions are fated, in the detective story because the decisive event, the murder, has already occurred. ACTIVITY 8 Character and verisimilitude Read again what W.H Auden says about characters in crime writing. Characters in literary texts do not always rely on realistic details or (verisimilitude). What other concerns might drive an author’s representation of character? Do characters have to be ‘believable’ to function effectively?
Think about any investigator figures (e.g. Sherlock Holmes, Inspector Morse or Jack Bauer) or criminal figure you know from your own reading or viewing. In what ways are they ‘real’? In what ways are they ‘unreal’? How does this relate to their function in the text?
Key terms Verisimilitude:bliterally this means likeness to truth and may be summarised as ‘truth to life’
Hrothgar’s hall and have killed many of his finest men. As Text 7D, a translated extract from Beowulf, shows, Grendel, a criminal outsider, is overtly compared to Cain – the first murderer, whose tale is told in the book of Genesis. Text 7D
Grendel this monster grim was called, march-riever mighty, in moorland living, in fen and fastness; fief of the giants the hapless wight a while had kept since the Creator his exile doomed. On kin of Cain was the killing avenged by sovereign God for slaughtered Abel. Ill fared his feud, and far was he driven, for the slaughter’s sake, from sight of men. Of Cain awoke all that woeful breed, Etins and elves and evil-spirits, as well as the giants that warred with God weary while: but their wage was paid them! From Beowulf, translated by Frances B Gummere
Glossary Fastness:bwilderness Fief:bslave Wight:bbeing Etin:bmonster
7.2.2bOld English and medieval quest narratives Beowulf, the longest and greatest of Old English poems, tells the tale of Beowulf, who leads the quest to capture the beast Grendel and his mother. They have been responsible for murderous raids on King
Exploring language With its references to ‘exile’, ‘killing’, ‘feud[ing]’, ‘slaughter’, conflict and punishment, the connections to crime writing in Beowulf are clear.
Of Cain awoke all that woeful breed, Etins and elves and evil-spirits
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7 Developing: Elements of crime writing The verse narratives of the Middle Ages also often deal with crime and misdoing. Within the context of a feudal society, these narratives focus especially on ideas of transgression, honour and restitution, although some, like William Langland’s epic Piers Plowman, are religious in focus. Inspired by the book of Revelation, Langland envisages the end of the world and vividly imagines the sins and depredations that are its precursors. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a classic quest narrative, summarised in Text 7E. ACTIVITY 9 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
The anonymous Gawain poet touches on crime writing in a number of interesting ways which are typical of the medieval romances. Read the summary of the poem in Text 7D, then jot down your thoughts about how the text uses: • • • • • • •
honour fear regret and guilt consequences and punishment temptation deception guilt
How do these ideas relate to other crime texts you have read or seen? Chaucer, the best known of the medieval poets, tells a number of stories in The Canterbury Tales – some tragic and some comic – that deal with issues relating to crime. In ‘The Pardoner’s Tale’, he regales us with the darkly comic story of three roisterers who try to kill Death only to come to a sticky end themselves. ‘The Reeve’s Tale’ and ‘The Miller’s Tale’ are bawdy comedies dealing with adultery and its consequences. More seriously, we may think, the knight in ‘The Wife of Bath’s Tale’ commits rape and is taught to reshape his attitude towards women. Crime within medieval society is thus a recurring theme in Chaucer’s major work.
Text 7E
Sir Gawain, who takes up the brutal challenge of a mysterious green-clad knight: he must strike off the Green Knight’s head in a single blow, but must in his turn face a single return blow from the Green Knight in a year’s time. Perceiving no risk, Gawain decapitates the Green Knight only to see him rise to his feet, pick up his severed head and leave, ordering Gawain to seek out the Green Chapel to receive his return blow. Gawain lives the year in fear. As the year draws to its close, he sets out on his quest and is invited to stay at an isolated castle. His host proposes an agreement: that Gawain should stay in the castle while the host hunts, but at the end of each day they must exchange whatever they have gained. The mistress of the castle tries to seduce Gawain; he resists, except for kissing and is honest in repaying his host the kisses he has received. On the third day Gawain accepts the gift of a magic belt that will preserve his life. Gawain keeps silent about this. Gawain meets the Green Knight at the chapel. Twice the Green Knight holds back his blow, but with the third he cuts the side of Gawain’s neck. The first two blows represent Gawain’s honesty in repaying the stolen kisses; the cut is for concealing the gift of the belt. Gawain is overcome with shame and wears the belt to remind him of his fault.
7.2.3bMedieval morality and mystery plays Criminal desire and moral ambiguity are often explored in the morality plays and mystery plays of the medieval era. Like more modern crime writing, such as Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novel Crime and Punishment or Graham Greene’s Brighton Rock, religious faith is significant in the exploration and experience of crime. Significant issues relating to crime writing are: The conflict between good and evil • The exploration of abstract social ideas and values related to the representation of crime in society (e.g. Vice, Justice and Equity). •
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A/AS Level English Literature B As in classical tragedy and the classic detective novel, characters tend not to develop but remain abstract ‘types’:
these plays move far beyond the flat ‘types’ typical of earlier drama and much classic detective fiction – they live, breathe and have their being.
The main character faces a variety of ethical trials and temptations • In the end evil is defeated, sin is renounced and goodness is restored on earth.
In Othello we are privy to Iago’s criminal machinations and follow the terrible inevitability of Othello’s descent from noble moor to murderer of Desdemona. Similarly, in King Lear, we observe the criminal means by which Goneril, Regan and Edmund further their own ends after Lear has ‘criminally’ given away his kingly powers. Titus Andronicus is a catalogue of crime: psychological torment, rape, dismemberment and murder.
•
See 8.5.5 for more on Crime and Punishment See 6.2.1 for more on BrightonbRock. Respublica is a good example of a morality play that deals explicitly with criminal issues. In this play, the character of Justice sets out to administer justice on ‘the criminal element’. Another interesting case comes in Liberality and Prodigality, where the character Equity acts as a kind of detective, serving Virtue. Equity’s function is to detect, arrest, and punish Prodigality, who has robbed and murdered Tenacity. Here is where Virtue gives Equity his orders:
So horrible a fact can hardly plead for favour: Therefore go you, Equity, examine more diligently The manner of this outrageous robbery: And as the same by examination shall appear, Due justice may be done in presence here. Liberality and Prodigality
Hamlet, which provides us with one of the great catchphrases of crime writing – ‘murder most foul’ (1.5.27) – is another excellent example as we see the eponymous hero struggling to come to terms with the murder of his father and seeking to avenge his death. As the play progresses, Shakespeare explores a wealth of ideas relating to crime, including those shown in Fig 7F. Fig 7F
Transgression – the relationship between Claudius and Gertrude
Key terms
7.2.3bRenaissance tragedy and comedy The works of the major Renaissance dramatists represent a considerable development. Whilst the classical, Old English and Middle English authors dealt with ideas about crime, the writers of the Renaissance tragedies (and especially the revenge tragedies) delve deep into the psychology of crime and its impact, from the perspectives of both the perpetrators and the victims of crime. Characters in
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Investigation – Hamlet sets out to establish the truth of the ghost’s claims
Ideas about crime in Hamlet
Morality play:ba play dealing with issues of morality and/or moral teaching Mystery play:ba play performed by the medieval trade guilds – from the French métier, meaning line of work or trade
Murder – Old Hamlet has been killed by his brother Claudius
Subterfuge – Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are sent by Claudius first to spy on Hamlet and then to escort him to his death in England
Revenge – Hamlet and Laertes both seek vengeance for the death of their fathers
Guilt – Claudius and Gertrude both suffer guilt for their actions.
In Text 7G Hamlet reflects upon the possibility of murdering his stepfather Claudius while he is praying. Note how transgression and confession in both their criminal and religious senses are important.
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7 Developing: Elements of crime writing Text 7G
Now might I do it pat, now a is a-praying, And now I’ll do’t – and so a goes to heaven, And so am I revenged. That would be scanned. A villain kills my father, and for that, I his sole son do this same villain send To heaven. Why, this is hire and salary, not revenge. A took my father grossly, full of bread, With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May, And how his audit stands who knows save heaven? But in our circumstance and course of thought ’Tis heavy with him. And am I then revenged To take him in the purging of his soul, When he is fi t and seasoned for his passage? No. Up sword, and know thou a more horrid hent, When he is drunk asleep, or in his rage, Or in th’incestuous pleasure of his bed, At game a-swearing, or about some act That has no relish of salvation in’t – Then trip him that his heels may kick at heaven, And that his soul may be as damned and black As hell whereto it goes. William Shakespeare, Hamlet 3.3.74–96
Glossary Hent:boccasion or opportunity
dark – sometimes deal with issues related to crime. The Merchant of Venice tells the tale of the ill-fated Shylock, a Jewish money-lender. The fact that he charges interest is perceived as criminal by the Christian community and he is badly mistreated; he is constantly mocked and is the victim of theft at the hands of his daughter, Jessica. Justice is a major theme of the play. Shylock ends up in court pleading for the right to cut ‘a pound of flesh’ from the body of the merchant Antonio. Mercy rarely finds its way into the world of traditional crime fiction, but relates importantly to the idea of crime. In Text 7H Portia (disguised as a lawyer) encourages Shylock to exercise mercy. Text 7H
The quality of mercy is not strained, It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest: It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes. ’Tis mightiest in the mightiest, it becomes The thronèd monarch better than his crown. His sceptre shows the force of temporal power, The attribute to awe and majesty, Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings; But mercy is above this sceptred sway. It is enthronèd in the hearts of kings, It is an attribute to God himself, And earthly power doth then show likest God’s When mercy seasons justice. William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice 4.1.180–193
ACTIVITY 10 The language of crime Read the extract from Hamlet. Write down all the words that relate directly to ideas of crime and punishment.
Which of these words relate to religious ideas of crime? • Which words relate to secular ideas of crime? • How do the two groups of words cross over and interact with each other? • What is the effect of this on you as a reader? •
It is not only in the tragedies of the period that crime surfaces. The comedies – which are often
ACTIVITY 11 Mercy is king! Read the passage from The Merchant of Venice again. In this passage, Portia, disguised as the lawyer Balthazar, uses two extended metaphors for mercy using the combined images of a king and God.
How do you find her use of these metaphors interesting and useful? • How do they shape your understanding and response? •
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A/AS Level English Literature B
What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong?
IDEAS ON ACTIVITIES Activity 11
The play deals with the crimes of murder and incest, as Oedipus slays his father and then (unknowingly) marries his mother. • Oedipus vows to punish King Laius’s murderer, but ironically is himself the guilty party. When he faces incontrovertible evidence that he is guilty of murder and incest, he blinds himself as punishment and lives out his life in torment wandering blindly around Greece. • Key ideas relating to crime are: investigation, evidence, punishment and guilt. The tale begins with ideas of crime as Oedipus is determined to find and punish whoever is guilty for the murder of King Laius of Thebes. Evidence is also an important part of the tale – various ‘witnesses’ appear throughout (e.g. Tiresias, the Corinthian prophet and the messenger) – and Oedipus is faced with a growing body of evidence to provide insight into his crimes. When he realizes the truth, he experiences crushing guilt and goes on to punish himself. •
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